What Don’t You Have The Violation of a Foundational Theological Principle in Africa’s Development Practices
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Theological Journal for Church and Society
Abstract
The quest for development for the African context has been largely
elusive despite the application of numerous theories and strategies.
Contemporary explanations do not sufficiently account for the root
cause of the persistent underdevelopment. This article argues that the
secular conception and approach to development defeats the process
from the onset because it starts the process from the wrong question:
‘What don’t you have?’ strengthening contextual weaknesses. It
proposes that development should start from God’s contextual
endowment and strengths determined through the right biblical
question: ‘What do you have?’ The purpose of this article is to
challenge the sacred-secular dichotomisation that consigns
development to secular public spaces while limiting theology and the
church’s functions around people’s private and spiritual life aspects.
We recommend theological participation, indeed leadership in the
conception and approach to development because development is by
nature theological business.
Description
Journal Article
Citation
Munyao, J. (2021). ‘What Don’t You Have? The Violation of a Foundational Theological Principle in Africa’s Development Practices’, African Theological Journal for Church and Society, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 28-56
